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Telling Boston Globe column about how pathetic Mike Tomlin and Keith Butler's defense was!!

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You disappointed me, Mike Tomlin and the Pittsburgh Steelers. You let me down.

Here I thought you had a real defense and a real coaching staff, ready to match wits with Bill Belichick and the Patriots with a unique game plan. You did it back in Week 7, when you switched to a Cover 2 scheme and held Tom Brady to 222 passing yards and slowed down Rob Gronkowski for much of the day.

Instead, you gave us the same old sorry Steelers defense that Brady has ripped apart his entire career. You made some baffling personnel decisions, and didn’t have your team prepared in a 36-17 loss on the biggest stage of the season.

Let’s start with the most head-scratching decision — the usage of Bud Dupree and James Harrison. They are your two best pass rushers, and the Texans showed you in the divisional round with Jadeveon Clowney and Whitney Mercilus that the Patriots are susceptible to inside pressure.

Yet the Steelers didn’t bring either player up the middle on a twist or inside blitz. In fact, you didn’t use either player nearly enough as a pass rusher. On Brady’s 44 real drop-backs (excluding a clock spike), Harrison and Dupree each dropped into coverage 15 times. Not only were you not attacking Brady with your best rushers, but neither player is exactly proficient in pass coverage or playing in space.

A couple of times you had Dupree lined up over center, but you dropped him into coverage.

Brady took advantage of this schematic flaw in the first quarter, audibling out of a run play . . .

. . . and into a spread formation . . .

. . . then sending Chris Hogan down the left seam for an easy 26-yard catch while flying past Harrison

Brady also had all day to find his receivers, like on Hogan’s 16-yard touchdown, when Brady scanned the field for 4.5 seconds before unleashing his throw.

Dupree and Harrison were both in pass coverage on the play.

Next, let’s talk about preparation. The Patriots exploited massive holes in the Steelers’ zones, and Pittsburgh never adjusted. The Steelers also had no answer for the Patriots’ up-tempo attack.

Never have we seen so many wide-open receivers running down the field in a playoff game.

All three touchdown throws by Brady were uncontested to wide-open receivers, and the Steelers had breakdowns on several other throws — Hogan wide open at the sticks for a 22-yard gain while two zone defenders covered Julian Edelman; a 12-yarder to Edelman on third and 10 in which Brady had his choice of three receivers; Hogan running wide open over the middle of the field, but Brady throwing too far behind him.

And the Steelers acted like they’ve never seen a flea-flicker before. In fact, veteran safety Mike Mitchell said the Steelers hadn’t seen it on film from the Patriots — which is incredible, because the Patriots ran a flea-flicker against the Ravens on Dec. 12, two weeks before the Ravens faced the Steelers.

Let’s call this what it was — arguably the worst defensive performance against the Patriots all season.

Other observations after rewatching the tape:

When the Patriots had the ball
■ Watching the game, it felt like Brady ripped apart the Steelers across the middle. And he did. But he did his most damage throwing to his left, and, frankly, couldn’t be stopped no matter which direction he threw.

His stats: 13 of 17 for 173 yards and a touchdown to the left, 8 of 12 for 98 yards over the middle, and 11 of 13 for 113 yards and two touchdowns to his right. The first touchdown to Hogan was a mistake by the free safety, who stood in the middle of the field and never bothered to cover Hogan standing 5 yards away. Edelman’s touchdown was a result of him shaking free of William Gay with a hard cut-back on the goal line. And on the flea-flicker TD, Brady easily could have thrown the ball to Mitchell instead of Hogan.

■ The Steelers sent only four true blitzes at Brady, plus four zone blitzes. They sent only three pass rushers 19 times, with Brady completing 11 of 19 for 130 yards and a sack. Brady converted 2 of 3 first downs against a three-man rush, and had some big gains with the Steelers in eight-man coverage – a 41-yarder to Edelman and a 26-yarder to Hogan.

But Brady was even better against the blitz. When the Steelers sent a four-man zone blitz, Brady was 4 of 4 for 47 yards and his first TD to Hogan. Against a five-man blitz, Brady was 4 of 4 for 79 yards, including a 39-yarder to Hogan and a 17-yarder to Edelman on third and 7.

■ The Patriots used up-tempo on their first drive and scored a field goal. They slowed it down and brought in the fullback for the second drive, and went three-and-out. They went back to the up-tempo on the third and fourth drives, and went 80 and 82 yards for touchdowns. That’s called a “trend.”

■ Brady really picked on Gay, the veteran cornerback. Gay had no chance of staying with Edelman in the red zone for his touchdown, and got burned badly by Hogan for a 39-yarder. Gay was giving upwards of 10 yards of cushion at the line of scrimmage, and just couldn’t keep up. And as they did in Week 7, the Patriots were able to get Edelman matched up against linebacker Lawrence Timmons 1-on-1 over the middle. Guess who won that matchup? Edelman for 17 yards.

■ It’s shocking that the Steelers didn’t find more creative ways to use Harrison to get after the passer, because he actually had a nice game. We had him down for three pressures — two against Marcus Cannon, one against Nate Solder — and two run stuffs. Harrison has an incredible knack for getting off his block and getting to the football.

■ The Patriots’ offensive line excelled in pass protection, and the interior unit of David Andrews, Joe Thuney, and Shaq Mason deserve credit for handling the inside stunts better and having a much-improved performance from the Texans game. Thuney was hit early in the game for a sack by Javon Hargrave, but otherwise held his own.

■ The running backs chipped in well in pass protection.

James White absolutely crushed Timmons on Hogan’s first touchdown . . .

. . . and LeGarrette Blount had a great blitz pickup to give Brady time to find Hogan over the middle for 24 yards.

■ But the offensive line definitely struggled in the run game, allowing 10 stuffs on just 23 runs. Some of it was a result of the unblocked defender making a play, but Hargrave (a nice young player) gave Andrews and Thuney some problems, Stephon Tuitt tossed Cam Fleming and Martellus Bennett aside for one stuff, and Harrison chucked Bennett aside for another stuff. Timmons had two run stuffs, but also whiffed on two big plays — Edelman’s catches for 41 and 17 yards.

When the Steelers had the ball
■ The Patriots made Ben Roethlisberger earn every inch of the field. Roethlisberger completed 13 straight passes in the first and second quarters, but for just 104 yards (8.0 average) with a long of 16. Interestingly, Roethlisberger was 10-for-13 passing against the Patriots’ three-man rush, including a 30-yarder to Sammie Coates. But when the Patriots sent five pass rushers, Roethlisberger was 2 of 7 for 24 yards.

■ The Patriots tackle really well, which is why they have the No. 1 scoring defense despite not having a great pass rush. Logan Ryan had an exceptional tackling day, including one shoestring stop on DeAngelo Williams to prevent a potentially huge run.

And the Patriots limited Antonio Brown to just 30 yards after the catch on his seven receptions. Playing a majority of zone defense, with two deep safeties to prevent the big throws, played a big role in the Steelers’ low YAC numbers, as well.

■ Ryan had a little bit of trouble sticking with Eli Rogers on crossers and pick plays, but otherwise had a phenomenal game. He had a great pass breakup on Rogers over the middle, and had tight coverage on the fade pass to Cobi Hamilton on fourth down in the end zone.

■ But Eric Rowe was targeted early and often by Roethlisberger, especially when the Steelers got into scoring range. Rowe allowed only three catches on nine targets, but benefitted from two bad drops (one by Hamilton in the end zone). Rowe allowed both 30-yard completions, plus a touchdown to Hamilton. He did come away with an interception on a deep ball intended for Darrius Heyward-Bay, but Rowe could be an issue for the Patriots when they face the Falcons’ high-flying attack.

■ Trey Flowers was the only player to hit Roethlisberger, and the Patriots pressured him only three other times. But Alan Branch had another fantastic game up front, logging four run stuffs and a quarterback pressure and often getting the better of Steelers center Maurkice Pouncey. Flowers was a little quiet this game, with one run stuff in addition to his QB hit, but when the Steelers ran the ball, it was Flowers whom they singled out for double-teams.

The linemen up front (particularly Branch) did a great job of holding their ground in 1-on-1 combat with the linemen and not leaving their gap assignments. Vincent Valentine’s run stuff for minus-3 yards on the goal line, while squeezing through right tackle and right guard, was the play of the game and totally shifted momentum.

■ Dont’a Hightower only played 36 snaps while Shea McClellin played 43 and Kyle Van Noy 42, but I think this was mostly scheme-related. The Steelers spread the Patriots out in three- and four-receiver sets all day, the Patriots needed their quicker players on the field, and Hightower is more of a physical thumper who doesn’t always thrive in coverage. The Patriots didn’t play one snap of base defense in the first half.

Ben Volin can be reached at ben.volin@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @BenVolin
 
Funny when the "Tomlin is great" crowd goes to the shadows until the 4th game of every season. He's a good coach. Nothing more. Cowher the same. Cowher, Tomlin and the next guy all the same without Ben. We'll see what happens when Ben is gone. It's a QB league. There will be people in Atlanta saying their coach is great in two weeks if they win LOL. Take Ryan out and that guy will be .500ish or worse just like Tomlin without Ben
 
Good article - I was starting to believe Cook & Poni after they spent 4 hours yesterday saying coaching was fine - Brady is just too good & and Steelers just need to wait till he retires before they try to win a title
 
This is what I have been saying for two days.

Keith Butler is guilty of professional malfeasance for that game plan... and Tomlin by extension for not slapping Butler upside his head at halftime and telling him to go back to a cover 2 and rush 5 ...including Dupree and Harrison.
 
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Stunning article on multiple levels. Obviously the harsh-but-true aspect itself. And of course you'd never ever ever see such level of negativity against the Steelers here. The reporter would go the way of the Centre county DA. But it's even so different from what you'd see in a Pittsburgh newspaper after a Steelers VICTORY. Typically, even a 21-20 win over the Browns, there's nothing but adoring praise for the great heroes. You wouldn't see an article like this basically proving the Steelers won mainly because the other team sucked. You certainly do for PITT victories, of course ("yeah Pitt won, but it was Villanova, or Duke, etc"(and nowhere near the level of the thoughtful analysis in this article).

I guess it's just surprising to see a glimmer of professional media when you live among sycophants and schlock.
 
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This is what I have been saying for two days.

Keith Butler is guilty of professional malfeasance for that game plan... and Tomlin by extension for not slapping Butler upside his head at halftime and telling him to go back to a cover 2 and rush 5 ...including Dupree and Harrison.
Maybe you should actually read the article. When the Steelers sent only 3 pass rushers Brady was 11-for-19, 0 touchdowns and a sack. When the Steelers brought 4 or more Brady went 21-for-23, 3 touchdowns and 1 sack. When you are spending $40 million on your defense ($15 million of that on Timmons), and $80 million on your offense, you aren't going to stop Brady.

The game would have been completely different if the offense had shown up. Bell getting hurt in the first quarter killed the threat of the running game. Williams only averaged 2.4 ypc. The receivers dropped at least 2 touchdowns. Coates had 4 drops on his own and the team had 6 total drops during the game (22 total during the regular season).
 
Funny when the "Tomlin is great" crowd goes to the shadows until the 4th game of every season. He's a good coach. Nothing more. Cowher the same. Cowher, Tomlin and the next guy all the same without Ben. We'll see what happens when Ben is gone. It's a QB league. There will be people in Atlanta saying their coach is great in two weeks if they win LOL. Take Ryan out and that guy will be .500ish or worse just like Tomlin without Ben
Who are the great coaches? Who would be a better than .500 coach without a franchise QB in the NFL?
 
Funny when the "Tomlin is great" crowd goes to the shadows until the 4th game of every season. He's a good coach. Nothing more. Cowher the same. Cowher, Tomlin and the next guy all the same without Ben. We'll see what happens when Ben is gone. It's a QB league. There will be people in Atlanta saying their coach is great in two weeks if they win LOL. Take Ryan out and that guy will be .500ish or worse just like Tomlin without Ben

The problem I believe with criticizing Tomlin is well, people don't want to be perceived as "racist". And Tomlin's record is pretty much the same as Cowher's. But again, that is unfair, Tomlin has coached his entire career with a HOF QB and Cowher coached most of his career with pedestrian talents and career backups.

The preparation and scheme on both sides of the ball this past Sunday was "way below the line". This guy (columnist) really nailed the nuances of the Pats against the Steelers defense. Wow, I wish locally we had a sportswriter who actually watched the tape and understood the game, rather than just be cheerleaders.

For a supposed "football town", we seem to have some pretty naive sports media.
 
The problem I believe with criticizing Tomlin is well, people don't want to be perceived as "racist". And Tomlin's record is pretty much the same as Cowher's. But again, that is unfair, Tomlin has coached his entire career with a HOF QB and Cowher coached most of his career with pedestrian talents and career backups.

The preparation and scheme on both sides of the ball this past Sunday was "way below the line". This guy (columnist) really nailed the nuances of the Pats against the Steelers defense. Wow, I wish locally we had a sportswriter who actually watched the tape and understood the game, rather than just be cheerleaders.

For a supposed "football town", we seem to have some pretty naive sports media.


Bravo
 
Who are the great coaches? Who would be a better than .500 coach without a franchise QB in the NFL?


Thanks for confirming the obvious. .500 coaches aren't that hard to come up with. Minus a franchise QB let's search for a .500 coach. That shouldn't be to hard. Google 2016 regular season .500 teams and take your pick of a few that pop up. Then look back 10 years and ya got a boatload to chose from. Hey how many games does Tomlin win coaching Buffalo the last five years? Just curious what you think?
 
The article confuses me. It seems to suggest that the Steelers didn't blitz Dupree and Harrinson enough, but then uses stats showing that Brady played better against the blitz.
 
Maybe you should actually read the article. When the Steelers sent only 3 pass rushers Brady was 11-for-19, 0 touchdowns and a sack. When the Steelers brought 4 or more Brady went 21-for-23, 3 touchdowns and 1 sack. When you are spending $40 million on your defense ($15 million of that on Timmons), and $80 million on your offense, you aren't going to stop Brady.

The game would have been completely different if the offense had shown up. Bell getting hurt in the first quarter killed the threat of the running game. Williams only averaged 2.4 ypc. The receivers dropped at least 2 touchdowns. Coates had 4 drops on his own and the team had 6 total drops during the game (22 total during the regular season).
I'd agree. I mentioned at the time that the steelers should have held the same thought as Pitt last season: this defense won't stop the Patriots so imperative to have an effective offense. Easier said than done since as the announcers said ad nauseum, the Patriots make sure they stop your best weapons.

So even before Bell got hurt he was being swallowed up. NE was selling out bringing up safeties and run blitzing the ends to prevent his trademark delaying to survey the hole. It was actually THEY who should have been more susceptible to something like an early flea flicker or reverse (which might have been alternate ways to get Brown involved). But Pgh showed no such innovation in the game. And of course epic failures inside the 5.

That all said the backup WRs also didn't step up and while Jesse James is a local darling, he's a shadow of Heath or the fragile Green. Needed a bit more from him (such as getting completely into the end zone, as it turned out).
 
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Thanks for confirming the obvious. .500 coaches aren't that hard to come up with. Minus a franchise QB let's search for a .500 coach. That shouldn't be to hard. Google 2016 regular season .500 teams and take your pick of a few that pop up. Then look back 10 years and ya got a boatload to chose from. Hey how many games does Tomlin win coaching Buffalo the last five years? Just curious what you think?
No, I'm going with the opposite question. Who are the much better coaches who would exceed the mark you just set?

Honest question:

Who would you like to see the Steelers replace Tomlin with that would be decidedly better?
 
Andy Reid and Bill O'Brien off the top of my head have done a ton with average at best QB play. Neither will win championships without a better QB though.
 
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Well the Globe broke open the child sexual abuse case in Boston. What did our papers do when that happened at PSU?

Stunning article on multiple levels. Obviously the harsh-but-true aspect itself. And of course you'd never ever ever see such level of negativity against the Steelers here. The reporter would go the way of the Centre county DA. But it's even so different from what you'd see in a Pittsburgh newspaper after a Steelers VICTORY. Typically, even a 21-20 win over the Browns, there's nothing but adoring praise for the great heroes. You wouldn't see an article like this basically proving the Steelers won mainly because the other team sucked. You certainly do for PITT victories, of course ("yeah Pitt won, but it was Villanova, or Duke, etc"(and nowhere near the level of the thoughtful analysis in this article).

I guess it's just surprising to see a glimmer of professional media when you live among sycophants and schlock.
 
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Maybe you should actually read the article. When the Steelers sent only 3 pass rushers Brady was 11-for-19, 0 touchdowns and a sack. When the Steelers brought 4 or more Brady went 21-for-23, 3 touchdowns and 1 sack. When you are spending $40 million on your defense ($15 million of that on Timmons), and $80 million on your offense, you aren't going to stop Brady.

The game would have been completely different if the offense had shown up. Bell getting hurt in the first quarter killed the threat of the running game. Williams only averaged 2.4 ypc. The receivers dropped at least 2 touchdowns. Coates had 4 drops on his own and the team had 6 total drops during the game (22 total during the regular season).
Not that anyone from the Steelers cares what I think, but...that's why I've been harping for them to move-up in the draft and getting some true "cover" D-backs. If you're gonna blitz, you can't have D-backs sitting back and giving cushions to the receivers.
 
Tomlin is a great coach...if going 10-6 every year is the ultimate goal and not winning a championships.
 
No, I'm going with the opposite question. Who are the much better coaches who would exceed the mark you just set?



Have you ever read a post from me that said Tomlin should be fired? Nope! Ever read a post from me that said Tomlin was a horrible coach? Nope! Ever seen a post from me that said Tomlin was a below average coach? Nope! Ever read a post that said this coach would better than Tomlin for the Steeers? Nope! Ever read a post from me that said the people that consider him a great coach has overrated Tomlin? Yep!
 


^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
To any non homer it's obvious coaching from top to bottom cost the Steelers any chance to compete Sunday. The player interviews today are hilarious. Almost to a man subtlety Point the finger at coaching and preparation as a problem. Tomlin great........LOL.
 
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Harsh- but right on the money.

More than anything, the Patriots were better prepared before the game and better coached during the game. If anything, the Antonio Brown incident caused the coaches to all LOSE FOCUS- at least that's the excuse I'd run with if I were one of the coaches responsible for such pitiful preparation that lead to the Steelers performance on Sunday.


The offense came our conservative
And confused.
The Steelers play calling on their first series was quite bad. The plan was apparently to play very conservatively as opposed to actually testing the Patriots defense right away. Questionable play calling continued throughout the game, including key times when they were in the red zone (and especially that set of downs when they had first and goal).

Sammie Coates certainly did not come ready to play. If your team can't rely on you to make big plays in big games then what value really are you to them. If you can't extend your arms a little bit and hold on to the ball, then there is simply no reason for the Steelers to hold on to you.

Defense -and why the team should really feel bad for Harrison - The defense lacked pressure at times and the secondary was out of position way too often. It seemes everyone but the Steelers knew playing zone defense against the Patriots was going to be a huge mistake. "Everyone but" happened to be correct.

Harrison gave his heart and soul ($350k out of his pocket) to be at his best for his team this year, and yet his team and his coaches didn't return the favor. Not only was he not being properly used at times, a number of his teammates and coaches did not step up and give their best effort needed to make to the Super Bowl- shame on them.

I may be I the minority, but I think Dupree is a bit overrated. Not that he is horrible, but as a first rounder, he needs to be making more plays behind the line of scrimmage- more consistently. Why is our 38 year old OLB head and shoulders better than our two young OLBs drafted in the first round.

Overall, it was a disappointing loss, but at least it was to a really good team. The only reason some of us probably don't feel completely disgusted with this loss is that the Steelers were playing against the best QB in the game and (as much as I hate to admit it) the best coached team in the NFL. Nobody in the NFL prepares their team better (with smarter plays) and no one gets more out of their players (all of them) than Belichick. Even if they had prepared better, coached better and played better, the Steelers would have struggled to beat such a good team.

It's almost as if the Steelers needed some greater purpose -something that made it an absolutely must to get to the Super Bowl this year. Maybe they should have made that greater purpose the need to send off Harrison with one final Super Bowl win (as this may be his last season) the way they did it for Bettis.
 
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Well the Globe broke open the child sexual abuse case in Boston. What did our papers do when that happened at PSU?
What do you want. How was the PG supposed to be aware anything was going on? It's not like the PG employed a full time reporter embedded in State College to cover nothing but Penn State. Oh wait, it did.
 
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Tomlin is a great coach...if going 10-6 every year is the ultimate goal and not winning a championships.
I think he is a fine coach, better than most, and as some mentioned, who among the tired retreads that recycle (over and over) through the league would be better? Norb Turner? Marty Mornewig?

He's not the best, but good. Same with their better players. Good enough for the Steelers right now, I suppose. If ticket sales (not asses in the seats, but sales) don't somehow slump (and it would take years of subpar play to erase the waiting lists), it is ok. Thanks to just enough previous years where they finished the job (and luckily didn't have to face NE in those years), they've built a ton of brand equity (basically, a civic religion). They can coast for quite a while. Not forever though. Not even them.
 
Andy Reid and Bill O'Brien off the top of my head have done a ton with average at best QB play. Neither will win championships without a better QB though.
Harbaugh has also won a SB and won a good many games with and without flacco, who other than one good run in the playoff's isn't really a franchise QB. He is solid though. Agree Obrien and Reid have won with very average QB play. Reid did it at two different locations. I would trade tomlin for Obrien in a heartbeat but I think Reid is pretty much the same thing as tomlin.
 
Have you ever read a post from me that said Tomlin should be fired? Nope! Ever read a post from me that said Tomlin was a horrible coach? Nope! Ever seen a post from me that said Tomlin was a below average coach? Nope! Ever read a post that said this coach would better than Tomlin for the Steeers? Nope! Ever read a post from me that said the people that consider him a great coach has overrated Tomlin? Yep!
Answer your own question with some elbow grease.
I would say Tomlin is a top 10 coach, but I think that group is pretty fluid 2-10. I think Ole Bill in NE is clearly the best and then no one else is clearly on the next level, so you can assign whatever adjective "good", "great", "grand", "average", etc. but it doesn't really matter unless you can come up with several HCs who are clearly better.
 
Some reporters want to make a difference in the world. Others want to kiss ass, do as little as possible and get by. Guess which ones the PG has.

What do you want. How was the PG supposed to be aware anything was going on? It's not like the PG employed a full time reporter embedded in State College to cover nothing but Penn State. Oh wait, it did.
 
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The fact is, Bradshaw was not far off the mark. Dumlin is consistently out coached. Great motivator i.e cheerleader . Wanny like gameday coach. Wait until Ben retires. He has been keeping this franchise afloat.
 
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I agree the media in Pittsburgh all suck up to the Steelers and to the Rooney's. Only Starkey to his credit came out with an article criticizing the steelers and DK to a certain extent but everyone else tap dances around the game issues. I don't expect them to be attack dogs but they need also to report the good with the bad they down played Antonio incident well it's Antonio being Antonio. My biggest criticism besides the media that Tomlin tries to be his players best friend well the NFL is a business and until Tomlin changes his mantra it will be another few years before we win another super bowl.
 
Here's the main reason Tomlin is not even close to being on even a lightly warm seat:

103-57.

That's his W-L record in 10 years.

He's going nowhere.
 
Did all you people forget the offense that did NOTHING for 2 games ?
Not saying defense wasn't bad but the offense was WORSE.
You are first and goal on the half yard line and you lose 5 yards, so that's the defense 's fault ?
You are the same people blaming Dixon for basketball team.
 
Did all you people forget the offense that did NOTHING for 2 games ?
Not saying defense wasn't bad but the offense was WORSE.
You are first and goal on the half yard line and you lose 5 yards, so that's the defense 's fault ?
You are the same people blaming Dixon for basketball team.

No question the offense and the OC deserves much of the blame for the game. Actually some of us did mention the poor play and play calling on the offensive side. I posted about it above and Ben basically called out Haley (who has only ever looked good as an OC when he decided to let Ben get more involved with much of the play calling. Apparently Haley took over most of the play calling on Sunday and it showed.

Here's what Ben said:

Roethlisberger said the Patriots "outcoached us, they outplayed us."

When pointing to red zone struggles during the playoffs, Roethlisberger said everything must improve, including his own play, "my playcalling and Coach [Todd] Haley's playcalling."


I think he and many of his teammates (including Harrison and Burns) believe the coaches badly failed on their part to properly prepare the team before the game and and then proceeded to fail again by not putting the players in the best position to win (both on offensive and defensive). And they are right in that assessment.
 
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